Korea and US move toward materializing MASGA with MoU on shipbuilding

by Seo Hye Seung Posted : May 9, 2026, 08:17Updated : May 9, 2026, 08:17
The US Department of Commerce and the Republic of Korea’s Ministry of Trade Industry and Resources MOTIR today signed a Memorandum of Understanding MOU establishing the Korea-US Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative KUSPI a new platform to strengthen bilateral cooperation in commercial shipbuilding workforce development industrial modernization and maritime manufacturing investment Courtesy of US International Trade Administration May 8 2026
The U.S. Department of Commerce and the Republic of Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources (MOTIR) today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) establishing the Korea-U.S. Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative (KUSPI): a new platform to strengthen bilateral cooperation in commercial shipbuilding, workforce development, industrial modernization, and maritime manufacturing investment. Courtesy of U.S. International Trade Administration. May 8, 2026
SEOUL, May 09 (AJP) -South Korea and the United States took the first concrete step Friday toward activating the $150 billion “MASGA” shipbuilding package embedded in Seoul’s broader $350 billion U.S. investment pledge, a move that could help ease lingering trade and tariff uncertainties hanging over Korean industries as Washington’s tariff regime faces mounting legal challenges.

The U.S. Department of Commerce and South Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources (MOTIE) signed a memorandum of understanding in Washington establishing the Korea-U.S. Shipbuilding Partnership Initiative (KUSPI), a bilateral platform designed to deepen cooperation in commercial shipbuilding, industrial modernization, maritime manufacturing investment and workforce development.

The agreement marks the operational launch of what Seoul has branded the MASGA initiative — shorthand for “Make American Shipbuilding Great Again” — which formed a central pillar of Korea’s commitment to invest $350 billion in the United States under last year’s trade understanding with Washington. Of the total, $150 billion was earmarked for revitalizing the U.S. shipbuilding sector.

The signing comes at a delicate moment for Seoul’s trade strategy, as Korean exporters continue to navigate uncertainty surrounding President Donald Trump’s evolving tariff policies. U.S. courts have recently delivered a series of rulings questioning the legal foundation of several Trump-era tariff mechanisms, including challenges to “global reciprocal tariffs” imposed under emergency authorities.

While the court setbacks have raised hopes in Seoul that some tariff pressure may eventually soften, Korean officials remain wary that Washington still retains powerful trade tools under Section 301 of the Trade Act, which allows the U.S. administration to impose tariffs or retaliatory measures over alleged unfair trade practices.

Seoul’s aggressive investment push into strategic American industries such as shipbuilding is increasingly viewed as both an industrial partnership and a geopolitical hedge aimed at reducing bilateral friction with Washington.

The MOU was signed by Park Jung-sung, South Korea’s deputy trade minister, and William Kimmitt, U.S. under secretary of commerce for international trade, under the oversight of Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan and U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.

Under the agreement, the two governments will establish a Korea-U.S. Shipbuilding Partnership Center in Washington later this year to coordinate collaboration among shipbuilders, suppliers, universities and research institutions from both countries.

Planned projects include facilitating foreign direct investment into the U.S. maritime industrial base, workforce training programs, shipyard productivity upgrades and technical exchanges.

“The MOU signing builds on ongoing U.S.-Korea cooperation in strategic industries and reflects continued efforts to strengthen allied industrial capacity, promote investment, and expand collaboration in advanced manufacturing sectors,” the U.S. International Trade Administration said in a statement.

The partnership also arrives amid growing alarm in Washington over the collapse of America’s shipbuilding capacity and increasing dependence on Asian allies for maritime industrial strength.
 
US Chief of Naval Operations Adm Daryl Caudle tours Hanwha Ocean’s Geoje shipyard in South Gyeongsang Province on Nov 15 2025 accompanied by Kevin Kim acting US ambassador to Korea Caudle inspected the shipyard’s assembly facilities and naval vessel quay including the USNS Charles Drew a US Navy dry cargo and ammunition ship undergoing maintenance repair and overhaul work at the yard Courtesy of Hanwha Ocean
U.S. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle tours Hanwha Ocean’s Geoje shipyard in South Gyeongsang Province on Nov. 15, 2025, accompanied by Kevin Kim, acting U.S. ambassador to Korea. Caudle inspected the shipyard’s assembly facilities and naval vessel quay, including the USNS Charles Drew, a U.S. Navy dry cargo and ammunition ship undergoing maintenance, repair and overhaul work at the yard. (Courtesy of Hanwha Ocean)
A  CNN-highlighted CBS “60 Minutes” investigation in March portrayed U.S. shipbuilding as a national security vulnerability, contrasting America’s shrinking industrial base with the massive scale and efficiency of South Korean shipyards led by firms such as Hanwha Group .

The report noted that the United States now produces only a handful of large commercial vessels annually compared with roughly 1,000 cargo ships built each year by China, while South Korea remains one of the world’s dominant shipbuilding powers.

It also spotlighted Hanwha’s acquisition and modernization of the Philadelphia shipyard as a symbol of Korea’s growing role in reviving U.S. maritime manufacturing.

In the program, Hanwha executives said the company plans to invest up to $5 billion into the Philadelphia yard and expand production capacity from roughly one ship per year to as many as 20 annually through automation, robotics and workforce expansion.

The report framed the issue not simply as industrial policy but as a national security imperative for Washington amid intensifying competition with China and growing vulnerabilities in global supply chains. “Shipbuilding is a national security necessity,” Michael Coulter, Hanwha’s top executive overseeing U.S. operations, said in the broadcast.

“The U.S. needs to be able to secure our own commerce.” The strategic logic has increasingly aligned Korean industrial ambitions with U.S. geopolitical priorities.

For Seoul, the shipbuilding partnership offers an opportunity to lock Korean firms deeper into America’s industrial rebuilding push while potentially cushioning Korean exporters from future tariff escalation. For Washington, Korean capital and expertise provide one of the few realistic paths toward rebuilding a severely weakened domestic shipbuilding ecosystem.

The Trump administration has repeatedly described America’s maritime decline as a national security crisis, with Trump himself signing executive orders last year to prioritize shipbuilding revival and establish a White House office dedicated to the sector. The MOU signed Friday signals that South Korea is moving beyond pledges and into implementation.

Whether the MASGA initiative ultimately translates into large-scale projects, shipyard modernization and meaningful tariff relief for Korean industries may determine how durable the broader Seoul-Washington economic alignment becomes in an increasingly protectionist era.